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- CAN WIRETAPS REMAIN COST-EFFECTIVE?
-
- by Robin Hanson
- hanson@ptolemy.arc.nasa.gov 510-651-7483
- 47164 Male Terrace, Fremont, CA 94539
-
- May 21, 1993
- Distribute Freely
-
- SUMMARY: Compared to an average monthly phone bill of eighty dollars,
- the option to wiretap the average phone line is probably worth less than
- twelve cents a month to police and spy agencies. Claims that this
- option is worth over a dollar a month ignore the basic economics of
- law enforcement. Thus recently proposed government policies to preserve
- wiretap abilities in the face of technological change must raise phone
- costs by less than one part in seven hundred to be cost-effective.
- Why not let a market decide if wiretaps make sense?
-
- BACKGROUND
-
- Until now, telephones have happened to allow the existence of "wiretaps",
- cheap detectors which can pick up conversations on a phone line without the
- consent of either party to the conversation. And since 1968, U.S. police
- have been allowed to request such wiretaps from judges, and must compensate
- phone companies for expenses to assist a tap. Since then, law enforcement
- agencies have come to rely on this capability to aid in criminal
- investigations.
-
- However, wiretaps have become more difficult as phone companies have
- switched to digital technologies. And powerful new encryption technologies
- threaten to make truly private communication possible; a small chip in each
- phone could soon make it virtually impossible to overhear a conversation
- without a physical microphone at either end. So the U.S. government has
- begun to actively respond to these threats to police wiretap abilities.
-
- Regarding digital phone issues, a "FBI Digital Telephone Bill" was
- circulated early in 1992 [1], proposing to require all communication
- services to support easy wiretaps, now without compensation from the
- police. Each tapped conversation would have to be followed smoothly as the
- parties used call-forwarding or moved around with cellular phones. The
- data for that conversation would have to be separated out from other
- conversations, translated to a "form representing the content of the
- communication", and sent without detection or degradation to a remote
- government monitoring facility, to be received as quickly as the parties to
- the conversation hear themselves talk. Congress has yet to pass this bill.
-
- Regarding encryption issues, the White House announced on April 16, 1993
- that 1) they had developed and begun manufacturing a special "wiretap" (or
- "Clipper") chip to be placed in future phones, instead of the total privacy
- chips which have been under private development, 2) they plan to require
- this chip in most phones the government buys, and 3) they will request all
- manufacturers of encrypted communications hardware to use this wiretap
- chip. The same day, AT&T announced it would use these chips "in all its
- secure telephone products".
-
- The plan seems to be to, at the very least, create a defacto standard for
- encryption chips, so that alternatives become prohibitively expensive for
- ordinary phone users, and to intimidate through the threat of further
- legislation. Such legislation would be required to stop privacy fans and
- dedicated criminals, who might be willing to pay much more to use an
- alternative total privacy standard.
-
- Both the specific wiretap chip design and the general algorithm are secret.
- Each chip would be created under strict government supervision, where it
- would be given a fixed indentifier and encryption key [2]. At some
- unspecified frequency during each conversation, the chip would broadcast
- its identifier and other info in a special "law enforcement field". Law
- enforcement officers with a court order could then obtain the key
- corresponding to this indentifier from certain unspecified agencies, and
- could thereby listen in on any future or previously recorded conversations
- on that phone.
-
- To date, most concerns voiced about the wiretap chip have been about its
- security. Encryption algorithms are usually published, to allow the
- absence of public demonstrations of how to break the code to testify to the
- strength of that code. And it is not clear what government agency could be
- trusted with the keys. Many suspect the government will not limit its
- access in the way it has claimed; the track records of previous
- administrations [3], and of foreign governments [4], do not inspire
- confidence on this point.
-
- This paper, however, will neglect these concerns, and ask instead whether
- this new wiretap chip, and other policies to preserve phone wiretaps, are
- cost-effective tools for police investigation. That is, which is a cheaper
- way for society to investigate crime: force phone communications to support
- wiretaps, or give police agencies more money to investigate crimes as they
- see fit? Or to put it another way, would police agencies still be willing
- to pay for each wiretap, if each wiretapping agency were charged its share
- of the full cost, to phone users, of forcing phones to support wiretaps?
-
- A recent U.S. General Accounting Office report on the FBI bill stated [1]:
-
- "[N]either the FBI nor the telecommunications industry has
- systematically identified the alternatives, or evaluated their costs,
- benefits, or feasibility."
-
- While this paper will not change this sad fact, it does aspire to improve
- on the current confusion. To begin to answer the above questions, we might
- compare the current benefits wiretaps provide to law enforcement agencies
- with projected costs of implementing the new wiretap chip and other wiretap
- policies.
-
- WIRETAP BENEFITS
-
- 1992 is the latest year for which wiretap statistics are available [5].
- According to the Office of U.S. Courts, 919 wiretap installations were
- requested by local, state, and federal police in 1990, no requests were
- denied, and 846 taps were installed. 2685 arrests resulted from wiretaps
- started the same year, 1211 arrests came from wiretaps in previous years,
- and about 60% of arrests eventually lead to convictions. About 37% of
- wiretaps were requested by federal authorities, and 67% of state wiretaps
- were in New York, New Jersey, and Florida. 28 states had no wiretaps, and
- 10 states do not allow wiretaps.
-
- About 69% of taps were regarding drug offenses, and 10% for racketeering,
- and 7% for gambling offenses. Wiretaps are most useful for investigating
- "victimless" crimes, since victims will often give police permission to
- record their calls.
-
- Each wiretap installation heard an average of 1861 calls, 19% of them
- incriminating, among 117 people. Of 829 installations reporting costs, the
- average cost was $46,492. Federal taps cost about twice as much as state
- taps, so federal agencies paid 53% of total wiretap costs. $1.1 million
- was also spent following up on wiretaps from previous years. Thus a total
- of $40.4 million was spent on wiretaps, to obtain about 4000 arrests, at
- about $10,000 per arrest, or four times as much as the $2500 per arrest
- figure one gets by dividing the $28 billion spent by all police nationally
- by the total 11 million non-traffic arrests in 1987 [6]. Thus wiretaps are
- a relatively expensive form of investigations.
-
- 75% of the wiretaps were for phone lines (vs pagers, email, etc.), and are
- the focus of this paper. The $30 million per year spent on phone taps
- represents only one thousandth of the total police expenditures.
- Projecting from the 138 million phone "access" lines in the country in 1990
- [6] suggests 147 million access lines in 1992. Thus about 20 cents spent
- per year per phone line, or about two cents a month, is spend on phone
- wiretaps. Since 1978, our foreign intelligence agencies have also been
- authorized to tap international phone calls. No statistics are published
- on these taps, so let us assume a similar number of "spy" wiretaps are
- done, giving a total of ~$60 million annually, or four cents per month
- spent on wiretaps per phone line.
-
- Of course the amount police spend on wiretaps is not the same as the
- benefits of wiretaps. How can we estimate benefits? Dorothy Denning, an
- advocate of both the FBI bill and the wiretap chip, claims that "the
- economic benefits [of wiretaps] alone are estimated to be billions of
- dollars per year" [7], and then refers to amounts fined, recovered, and "$2
- billion in prevented potential economic loss" by the FBI from 1985 to 1991.
- Denning further relays fascinating FBI claims that through wiretaps "the
- hierarchy of organized crime has been neutralized or destabilized", and
- that "the war on drugs ... would be substantially ... lost" without them.
-
- Two billion dollars per year of wiretap benefit would translate to a little
- over a dollar a month per phone line. Denning, however, offers no support
- for her claims, and appears to be relaying internal FBI figures, which the
- FBI itself has neither revealed nor explained to the public. And the FBI
- is hardly a neutral party on this subject.
-
- Estimating the benefits of police investigations is not as simple as it
- might seem, however, and certainly requires more than adding up amounts
- fined or recovered. Long and well-established results in the economics of
- law enforcement [8] tell us to reject the notion that we should be willing
- to spend up to one dollar on police, in order to collect another dollar in
- fines or to prevent another dollar of theft. So, for example, we rightly
- reject IRS pleas for increased budget based solely on estimates of how many
- more dollars can be collected in taxes for each dollar spent by the IRS.
- In fact, a main reason given for using public police to investigate crime,
- instead of private bounty hunters, is to avoid such police overspending.
-
- In general, we deter a given class of criminals through a combination of
- some perceived probability of being caught and convicted, and some expected
- punishment level if convicted. And some crime is directly prevented, rather
- than deterred, through some level of police monitoring. The optimum police
- budget is a complex tradeoff between social costs due to the crimes
- themselves, the punishment exacted, and police expenses.
-
- How then can we estimate wiretap benefits? Let us assume that about the
- right total amount is being spent on police, and that police have about the
- right incentives, to spend their budget to monitor where it would help the
- most, and to get as many as possible of the right kinds of convictions.
- (If police budgets are too low, then the answer is to increase them, rather
- than trying to crudely subsidize any one of their expenses.)
-
- In this case the social benefit of being able to wiretap is no more than
- about the additional amount police would be willing to pay, beyond what
- they now pay, to undertake the same wiretaps (assuming this remains a small
- fraction of total police budgets). The benefit of wiretaps is actually
- less than this value, because were wiretaps to become more expensive, we
- might prefer to get the same criminal deterrence by instead raising
- punishment and lowering the probability of conviction, or perhaps we might
- accept a lower deterrence level, or even decriminalize certain activities.
- Police monitoring might be similarly adjusted.
-
- How much police would be willing to pay for each wiretap would depend of
- course on how what alternatives are available. If unable to wiretap a
- particular suspect's phone line, police might instead use hidden
- microphones, informants, grant immunity to related suspects, or investigate
- a suspect in other ways.
-
- The law requires that police requesting a wiretap must convince a judge
- that other approaches "reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if tried
- or to be too dangerous". But in practice judges don't often question
- boilerplate claims to this effect in police requests [9], and
- investigations often continue even after a wiretap has failed to aid an
- investigation. Experienced investigators advise wiretaps as a last resort,
- but mainly because wiretaps are so expensive.
-
- More importantly, police can also choose to focus on similar suspects who
- are more easily investigated without wiretaps. Most police cases are near
- the borderline where it is not clear that they are worth pursuing, and will
- be simply dropped should a more pressing case suddenly arise. Many cases
- reach the point where a wiretap might help, but are dropped because a
- wiretap seems too costly. And most cases now using wiretaps would probably
- be abandoned if wiretaps became dramatically more expensive.
-
- No doubt a few wiretaps are so valuable that it would have cost ten times
- as much to obtain similar results through other means. But on average, it
- is hard to imagine that police would be willing to pay more than a few
- times what they now pay for each wiretap. If we assume that police would
- on average be willing to pay twice as much for each tap, then the social
- benefit of phone wiretaps is about equal to the current spending level of
- four cents a month per phone line. If we assume that police would on
- average be willing to pay four times as much per wiretap, the option to
- wiretap the average phone would be worth twelve cents a month.
-
- A better estimate of wiretap values might come from randomly asking recent
- wiretap requestors whether they would have still requested that wiretap had
- they expected it to take twice as much labor to get the results they had
- expected, or three times as much, etc. The FBI will not allow such a
- survey by ordinary citizens, but perhaps some state police would. But
- until such research is done, the twelve cent figure seems a reasonably
- generous estimate, and the four cent figure may be closer to reality,
-
- Of course the value of the option to tap any particular phone line
- presumably varies a great deal from the average value. But unless the
- police can somehow pay only for the option to wiretap particular phone
- lines of its choosing, it is the average value that matters for a
- cost/benefit analysis.
-
- WIRETAP COSTS
-
- Let us for the moment optimistically assume that the U.S. government
- encryption scheme used in the wiretap chip is as secure as whatever private
- enterprise would have offered instead, protecting our conversations from
- the spying ears of neighbors, corporations, and governments, both foreign
- and domestic. Even so, the use of this chip, and of other policies to
- support wiretaps, would create many additional costs to build and maintain
- our communication system.
-
- Some phone companies must have perceived a non-trivial cost in continuing
- to support wiretaps while moving to digital phone transmissions, even when
- compared to the widely recognized value of staying on the good side of the
- police. Otherwise the police would not have complained of "instances in
- which court orders authorizing the interception of communications have not
- been fulfilled because of technical limitations within particular
- telecommunications networks" [1].
-
- The wiretap chip requires extra law enforcement fields to be added to phone
- transmissions, increasing traffic by some unknown percentage. A special
- secure process must be used to add encryption keys to chips, while securely
- distributing these keys to special agencies, which must be funded and
- monitored. The chips themselves are manufactured through a special process
- so that the chip becomes nearly impossible to take apart, and the pool of
- those who can compete to design better implementations is severely limited.
- Private encryption systems not supporting wiretaps would require none of
- these extra costs.
-
- Perhaps most important, government decree would at least partially replace
- private marketplace evolution of standards for how voice is to be
- represented, encrypted, and exchanged in our future phones. It is widely
- believed that governments are less efficient than private enterprise in
- procuring products and standards, though they may perhaps perform a useful
- brokering role when we choose between competing private standards. How
- much less efficient is a matter of debate, some say they pay twice as much,
- while others might say they pay only 10% more.
-
- This type of wiretap support also raises costs by preventing full use of a
- global market for telephone systems. It pushes certain domestic phone
- standards, which foreign countries may not adopt, and requires the use of
- encryption methods known only to our government, which foreign countries
- are quite unlikely to adopt.
-
- In 1990, 53 U.S. phone companies had total revenues of $117.7 billion for
- domestic calls, $4.4 billion for overseas calls, and $4.5 billion for
- cellular calls [6], for a total cost of $126.6 billion dollars to run the
- phone system. Extrapolating recent trends suggests $138 billion for 1992,
- and an average monthly phone bill of $78 per line. If we generously assume
- that police and spies would on average be willing to pay four times as much
- as the ~$60 million they now spent on wiretaps annually, we find that
- wiretaps are not cost effective if we must raise phone costs by as much as
- one part in 700 to preserve wiretap abilities in the face of technological
- change. The twelve cents per line wiretap option value must be compared
- with an average seventy dollar monthly phone bill. (If we assume that
- police would only pay twice as much on average, then this limit falls to
- one part in 2300!)
-
- Dorothy Denning relays FBI claims that $300 million is the maximum
- cumulative development cost "for a switch-based software solution" so that
- phone companies can continue to support wiretaps [7]. Denning does not,
- however, say how long this solution would be good for, nor what the
- software maintenance and extra operating costs would be. And again this is
- a figure which the FBI itself has neither revealed nor explained to the
- public. If we use a standard estimate that software maintenance typically
- costs twice as much as development [10], and accept this FBI estimate, then
- this extra software cost would be by itself five times the above generous
- estimate of annual wiretap benefits.
-
- The current government contractor claims it will offer the wiretap chips
- for about $26 each in lots of 10,000 [2], over twice the $10 each a
- competing private developer claims it would charge [11] for a chip with
- comparable functionality, minus wiretap support. And the wiretap chip
- price probably doesn't reflect the full cost of government funded NSA
- research to develop it. If only one phone (or answering machine) is
- replaced per phone line every five years, the extra cost for these chips
- alone comes out to over 27 cents extra a month per line, or by itself more
- than two times a twelve cent estimated wiretap option value. Of course
- most phones wouldn't have encryption chips for a while, but the wiretap
- benefit is per phone, so this argument still applies.
-
- COMPARING BENEFITS AND COSTS
-
- Given the dramatic difference between the total cost of running the phone
- system and an estimated social value of wiretaps, we can justify only the
- slightest modification of the phone system to accommodate wiretaps. When
- the only modification required was to allow investigators in to attach
- clips to phone wires, wiretap support may have been reasonable. But when
- considering more substantial modification, the burden of proof is clearly
- on those proposing such modification to show how the costs would really be
- less than the benefits. This is especially true if we consider the costs
- neglected above, of invasions of the privacy of innocents, and the risk
- that future administrations will not act in good faith [3].
-
- If consensus cannot be obtained on the relative costs and benefits of
- wiretaps, we might do better to focus on structuring incentives so that
- people will want to make the right choices, whatever those might be.
- Regarding phone company support for wiretaps, it seems clear that if
- wiretaps are in fact cost-effective, there must be some price per wiretap
- so that police would be willing to pay for wiretaps, and phone companies
- would be willing to support them. As long as the current law requiring
- police to pay phone company "expenses" is interpreted liberally enough, the
- market should provide wiretaps, if they are valuable.
-
- Monopoly market power of phone companies, or of police, might be an issue,
- but if we must legislate to deal with monopoly here, why not do so the same
- way we deal with monopoly elsewhere, such as through price regulation?
- Legislating the price to be zero, however, as the FBI bill seems to
- propose, seems hard to justify. And having each police agency pay for
- wiretaps, rather than all phone companies, seems fairer to states which
- forbid or greatly restrict the use of wiretaps.
-
- Regarding encryption chips, recall that without legislation outlawing
- private encryption, serious criminals would not be affected. In this case,
- it does not seem unreasonable to allow phone companies to offer discounts
- to their customers who buy phones supporting wiretaps, and thereby help
- that phone company sell wiretaps to police. Each phone user could then
- decide if this discount was worth buying a more expensive phone chip, and
- risking possible unlawful invasions of their privacy. Adverse selection,
- however, might make privacy lovers pay more than they would in an ideal
- world.
-
- If outlawing private encryption is seriously considered, then we might do
- better to instead just declare an extra punishment for crimes committed
- with the aid of strong encryption, similar to current extra punishments for
- using a gun, crossing state lines, or conspiring with several other people.
- As in these other situations, a higher punishment compensates for lower
- probabilities of convicting such crimes, and for higher enforcement costs,
- while still allowing individual tradeoffs regarding wiretap support.
-
- If, as seems quite possible, the stringent cost requirements described here
- for preserving wiretap abilities cannot be met, then we should accept that
- history has passed the economical wiretap by. Police functioned before
- 1968, and would function again after wiretaps.
-
- [1] ftp: ftp.eff.org /pub/EFF/legislation/new-fbi-wiretap-bill
- /pub/EFF/legal-issues/eff-fbi-analysis
-
- [2] Clipper Chip Technology, ftp: csrc.ncsl.nist.gov /pub/nistnews/clip.txt
-
- [3] Alexander Charns, Cloak and Gavel, FBI Wiretaps, Bugs, Informers, and
- the Supreme Court, Univ. Ill. Press, Chicago, 1992.
-
- [4] Headrick, The Invisible Weapon, Oxford Univ. Press, 1991.
-
- [5] Report on Applications for Orders Authorizing or Approving the
- Interception of Wire, Oral, or Electronic Communications, 1992,
- Administrative Office of U.S. Courts, Washington, DC 20544.
-
- [6] Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1992.
-
- [7] Dorothy Denning, "To Tap Or Not To Tap", Comm. of the ACM, March 1993.
-
- [8] Richard Posner, Economic Analysis of Law, 4th Ed., 1992, Chapter 22.
-
- [9] Report of the National Commission for the Review of Federal and State
- Laws Relating to Wiretapping and Electronic Surveillance, Washington,
- 1976.
-
- [10] Barry Boehm, Software Engineering Economics, Prentice Hall, 1981.
-
- [11] Conversation with Steven Bryen, representative of Secure
- Communications Technology, 301-588-2200, April 25, 1993.
-
- No one paid Robin anything to write or research this (unfortunately :-)
-